Thursday, May 24, 2012

China's Sea Claims Excessive, Says US

WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says that
China’s claims in the South China Sea exceed what is permitted by the
UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

She added that US failure to approve the UNCLOS weakens its advocacy for allies in the disputed South China Sea.

Clinton was speaking at a hearing Wednesday of the Senate Committee
on Foreign Relations, where she and top military leaders offered an
impassioned plea for the US to join the pact.

To China’s chagrin, the Obama administration has asserted since 2010
that although the US is not itself a claimant state in the South China
Sea, it has an interest in the peaceful resolution of the disputes and
in the freedom of navigation in waters that carry a large chunk of
global trade.

Clinton said the US supports countries “being threatened” by China’s claims.

“As a non-party, we cede the legal high ground to China. We put
ourselves on the defensive. We are not as strong an advocate for our
friends and allies in the region as I would like us to be, and I don’t
think that’s any place for the world’s pre-eminent maritime power to
find ourselves,” she said.

China is among the more than 160 nations that are party to the
convention. Its expansive claims in the South China Sea are disputed by
Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan, Vietnam and the Philippines, a US treaty ally.

The convention was concluded in 1982 and has been in force since
1994. Republican opposition has stalled US approval for years although
the military says it still acts in accordance with the pact’s
principles.

Despite considerable bipartisan support and the backing of
pro-business groups, Democrat committee chairman Sen. John Kerry
acknowledged the difficulty in moving the treaty, especially in an
election year in the United States. Several Republican lawmakers voiced
opposition Wednesday to the convention.

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, said
US endorsement would strengthen US security interests as it would
provide clarity in definition of navigational rights and maritime zones —
at a time of growing competition for resources.

“And from that clarity comes stability. And as we now begin to
rebalance our security interests into the Pacific, this becomes very
important,” Dempsey said.

Democrat Sen. Barbara Boxer criticized Beijing’s claims in the South
China Sea. She produced a map to show the claims extended far beyond
China’s own 200-mile (320-kilometer) exclusive economic zone and
amounted to a “significant territorial grab that comes very close to the
land borders of countries in the region.”

She referred to the standoff at the Scarborough Shoal that began last
month when the Philippines navy accused Chinese fishermen of poaching
within its exclusive zone.

The Philippines accused China on Wednesday of sending more government
and fishing vessels to the uninhabited, horseshoe-shaped shoal. Manila
says China has a total of 96 ships, fishing boats and dinghies there,
while the Philippines has two.

Rising power China has turned down a Philippine invitation for international arbitration of the dispute.

Beijing’s position in the South China Sea disputes is based on
ancient maps. A map it submitted to the UN in 2009 claims virtually the
entire South China Sea, but Beijing has failed to clarify the exact
extent of its claims.